RICS-compliant valuations for repaying your Help to Buy equity loan in the capital








London had the most generous Help to Buy scheme in England, with equity loans up to 40% of the property value compared to just 20% elsewhere. Over 12,200 London properties were purchased using Help to Buy equity loans between 2013 and 2018, with Barnet, Croydon, and Greenwich seeing the highest uptake. Now that the first wave of buyers has passed the five-year interest-free period, many are facing significant monthly interest charges and need a RICS-compliant valuation to repay their equity loan. With London's average house price at £559,000, a 40% equity loan on a typical property represents over £220,000 that must be repaid based on current market value — not the original purchase price. The valuation determines exactly what you owe.

£559,000
Average House Price
12,200+
Help to Buy Properties
Purchased 2013-2018
From £400
HTB Valuation Cost
London pricing
40%
London Equity Loan
Highest in England
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
London Help to Buy owners face steeper stakes than buyers elsewhere in England, because the capital used a 40% equity loan scheme. Outside London, the standard Help to Buy loan was 20%, but property prices here pushed the government to double the support. Homes bought through London Help to Buy had a maximum price of £600,000. Buy near that cap with a 40% equity loan and the government piece alone is £240,000. Once five years have passed, interest starts at 1.75% a year and then rises by RPI plus 1% annually. On a £240,000 loan, year six interest works out at £4,200 a year. If the property has grown in value, the loan grows with it, and so does the interest charged on it.
A RICS Help to Buy valuation gives the current market value of the property, and that figure sets the repayment amount, whether the loan is being cleared on a sale, through remortgaging, or by staircasing. Homes England sets the rules tightly. The surveyor must be RICS-registered, must include at least three comparable properties sold in the last 12 months within a two-mile radius, and those comparables need to match the property type, size and age. The report lasts for three months and has to go to Lenvi Servicing Limited, the administrator appointed by Homes England. Without that compliant valuation, redemption of the equity loan cannot move forward.
London values do not move in lockstep, borough to borough. Across 2025, the average London property price fell by 0.7% as affordability pressures and extra housing supply weighed on the market, although some boroughs dropped further while others held steady or edged up. For Help to Buy owners, that can mean the loan repayment is lower than expected, or, in stronger areas, higher than they had planned for. A few will have seen their home go backwards in value. A professional RICS valuation gives the figure that counts, so our clients do not overpay and the scheme’s legal requirements are met.
Source: ONS Census 2021. Help to Buy properties in London were predominantly new-build flats and houses within the £600,000 price cap.

London Help to Buy borrowers face the highest equity loan exposure in England. A 40% loan on a property purchased for £500,000 means you owe £200,000 based on the original value — but the repayment amount is calculated on the current market value. If your property has appreciated to £600,000, your 40% repayment rises to £240,000. This £40,000 increase is far more significant than the equivalent appreciation would be for a 20% equity loan outside London. Interest charges after year five compound this issue: 1.75% annually on £240,000 is £4,200, rising each year by RPI plus 1%. Many London homeowners underestimate the financial pressure this creates, making an accurate RICS valuation essential for planning your exit strategy.
London Help to Buy valuations cost more due to higher property values and the complexity of assessing comparable sales in a diverse and fluctuating market.
Our surveyors work across London as RICS-registered professionals with Help to Buy equity loan valuations under their belts. They know the Homes England requirements, from closely matched comparables to strict Red Book valuation standards. With surveyors based in all 33 London boroughs, we can draw on local market data and spot genuine like-for-like sales in places where prices can change street by street.

Enter your property details and receive an instant price based on your London location and property type. Once you book, we arrange the inspection with your RICS-registered surveyor and coordinate access. Most London valuations can be scheduled within three to five working days depending on your availability and the surveyor's diary.
Your surveyor visits your London property to carry out the internal inspection and assess its condition and market appeal. For a standard London flat or house, the visit typically takes 60 to 90 minutes. The surveyor will also research and document at least three comparable sales within two miles, ensuring they match your property type, size, and age as required by Homes England.
The RICS-compliant valuation report is delivered within five working days of the inspection. It includes the assessed market value, details of the comparable properties used, and supporting evidence for the valuation. The report is valid for three months and can be submitted directly to Lenvi Servicing Limited to proceed with your equity loan redemption, whether you are selling, remortgaging, or staircasing.
Help to Buy equity loans are interest-free for the first five years, with only a £1 per month management fee. From year six onward, interest starts at 1.75% annually and rises each year by RPI plus 1%. For London borrowers with large 40% equity loans, delaying redemption means paying thousands of pounds in interest every year. If you purchased your Help to Buy property in 2018 or 2019, you are approaching or have already passed the five-year threshold. Getting a RICS valuation and planning your redemption strategy now — whether through a remortgage, cash repayment, or staircasing — can save you substantial costs over the life of the loan.
The London version of Help to Buy was drawn up separately from the rest of England because the capital’s prices were so much higher. In Birmingham, Manchester or Leeds, buyers could find new-build homes under £250,000 with a 20% equity loan, while similar property types in London often sat between £400,000 and £500,000. The government brought in the 40% equity loan for London purchases so first-time buyers had a realistic route into the market. Barnet, Croydon and Greenwich saw the highest uptake, and Barnet alone had more than 900 Help to Buy purchases by 2018. Most were new-build flats in developments shaped around demand for affordable, or at least accessible, homeownership.
The effect of that bigger loan is becoming clearer now. London homeowners who used the 40% scheme between 2013 and 2018 hold equity loans that are twice the size of those outside the capital, and price growth has been patchy. Some boroughs have seen strong gains, so repayment figures have climbed sharply. Others, especially in outer London, have stayed flat or fallen, which can reduce the redemption amount but also leaves less equity to remortgage against. A RICS Help to Buy valuation is the only way to pin down the exact position. With the average London house price at £559,000 and the Help to Buy property cap at £600,000, the sums are too large to guess at.
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A Help to Buy valuation in London usually costs between £400 and £500, depending on the property. That is less than 0.1% of the average London house price of £559,000, and tiny compared with the exposure created by the capital’s 40% equity loan scheme. On a home valued at £550,000, a 40% equity loan leaves £220,000 owed. Get the valuation wrong by just 5% and you could overpay by £11,000. If the market has softened and the property is worth less than expected, an independent RICS valuation stops you paying back more than the law requires.
It is not just about avoiding a costly mistake. The valuation is what lets you act. Without a compliant RICS report, the sale cannot go through, the remortgage to clear the loan cannot happen, and staircasing to reduce it is off the table. Many London Help to Buy owners are already beyond the five-year interest-free period and are facing rising monthly charges, with 1.75% a year on a £220,000 loan coming to £3,850 annually, then increasing by RPI plus 1% each year. The sooner we get the valuation done and a redemption decision made, the less cumulative interest builds up. It is not just another cost, it is the route to control over one of the biggest debts most people will ever carry.

Help to Buy valuations in London typically cost between £400 and £500 depending on the property type, size, and borough. This is higher than the national average of around £350 because London property values are significantly elevated, requiring surveyors to invest more time identifying accurate comparable sales in a diverse and fragmented market. High-value properties approaching the £600,000 Help to Buy price cap may cost toward the upper end of the range. You can get an exact price by entering your property details through our online quote system.
The government introduced the 40% equity loan specifically for London to address the capital's exceptionally high property prices. First-time buyers in London were effectively locked out of homeownership because even new-build properties within the Help to Buy scheme routinely exceeded £400,000 to £500,000. A 20% equity loan on a £500,000 property would provide £100,000, still leaving buyers needing a £375,000 mortgage plus a £25,000 deposit — unaffordable for most. The 40% loan doubled the government contribution to £200,000, reducing the mortgage requirement to £275,000 and making the scheme viable for London incomes. This higher loan also means London Help to Buy owners now face significantly larger repayment obligations.
The on-site inspection typically takes between 60 and 90 minutes for a standard London flat or house. Larger properties or those with complex layouts may take slightly longer. After the visit, the surveyor prepares the RICS-compliant report, which is delivered within five working days. The report includes the market valuation, details of at least three comparable sales within two miles, and supporting evidence for the assessed value. Once you have the report, it is valid for three months and can be submitted to Lenvi Servicing Limited to proceed with your equity loan redemption.
If your property has fallen in value, your Help to Buy equity loan repayment is calculated on the lower current market value, not the original purchase price. This works in your favor. For example, if you bought a property for £500,000 with a 40% equity loan of £200,000, but the property is now worth £480,000, you owe 40% of £480,000, which is £192,000 — saving you £8,000. Some outer London boroughs have seen flat or even negative price growth in recent years due to affordability pressures. A RICS valuation provides the independent, evidence-based figure that protects you from overpaying and ensures you only repay what is legally due.
Yes. You must repay your Help to Buy equity loan in full when you sell the property, and a RICS-compliant valuation is required to calculate the repayment amount. The amount you owe is based on the sale price or market value, whichever is higher, so the valuation must be accurate and meet Homes England standards. Most London Help to Buy owners arrange the valuation as soon as they decide to sell, well before exchange, to understand the exact redemption sum and ensure there are no delays at completion. Without a valid valuation report, the sale cannot proceed because the equity loan cannot be legally discharged.
You can, provided that surveyor is RICS-registered and experienced in Help to Buy valuations that meet Homes England requirements. The critical difference is that your original purchase survey — whether it was a Level 2 or Level 3 — focused on the condition and defects of the property, while a Help to Buy valuation focuses solely on market value and comparable sales evidence. The surveyor must provide at least three like-for-like comparables sold within the last 12 months and within two miles of your London property. If your original surveyor can meet these criteria, they are suitable; if not, you will need a specialist valuation surveyor.
If you believe the valuation is inaccurate, you have the right to challenge it by commissioning a second independent RICS valuation. You will need to pay for the second valuation yourself, and both reports must be submitted to Lenvi Servicing Limited for review. Homes England will consider the evidence from both valuations and may request additional information or appoint a third independent surveyor to arbitrate. Disputes are uncommon when the valuation is carried out by an experienced RICS surveyor using robust comparable evidence, but the appeals process exists to protect homeowners from genuinely flawed assessments.
From the start of year six, you pay an annual interest charge of 1.75% on the outstanding equity loan amount, which is then divided into monthly payments. The interest rate increases every year by RPI plus 1%. For a London buyer with a 40% equity loan on a property now valued at £550,000, the equity loan is worth £220,000. Year six interest would be 1.75% of £220,000, which is £3,850 per year or roughly £320 per month. In year seven, the rate rises to approximately 2.75% to 3.5% depending on RPI, pushing the annual charge to between £6,050 and £7,700. This escalating cost is why many London Help to Buy owners prioritize redemption before or shortly after year five.
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RICS-compliant valuations for repaying your Help to Buy equity loan in the capital
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